Strengthened, conductivity-tunable, and low solvent-sensitive flexible conductive rubber films with a Zn2+-crosslinked one-body segregated network

2021 
Abstract A high-performance flexible conductive material based on cheap carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCS) and carboxylated styrene-butadiene rubber (XSBR) was fabricated via latex film-forming technique. Nano zinc oxide (ZnO) was introduced to react with CMCS, generating a Zn2+-crosslinked CMCS one-body segregated (Zn2+-COBS) network. Differing from reported conductive fillers with segregated structures, this Zn2+-COBS network was a continuous framework structure, which could be turned into conducting network by absorbing moisture. Superior tensile strength of 22.6 MPa was achieved with 30 wt% CMCS and 2.5 wt% ZnO owing to the “reinforced concrete structure” effect of Zn2+-COBS architecture. The order of volume resistance (Rv) of the films could be tailored between ×108 and ×104 Ω cm by changing the water content from 0 to ∼20 %, although at 20% water content the strength decreased to about 2 MPa. Particularly, the material with 30 wt% CMCS and 2.5 wt% ZnO achieved a Rv of 7.8×103 Ω cm with 18.7 % water content. Thanks to the abundant hydrogen bonding interactions between CMCS chains, this special architecture provided a strong swelling restriction on the rubber matrix and dramatically improved the conducting stability of film in solvents. The Rt/R0 in toluene, petroleum ether and anhydrous alcohol for 2 hours were only 7.52, 1.35 and 1.47 for the films with a water content of 4.9 %, 5.3 % and 8.8 %, respectively. These results demonstrate a promising method to fabricate an economical, conductivity-tunable, and flexural film material with potential applications in humidity detectors or in solvent environments.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    44
    References
    1
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []